What are Clinical Preventive Services? Services that are delivered by a health care provider in a clinical setting: •Private office •Community Health Center •Department of Health clinic •Hospital-based clinic •Family Planning clinic •School-based clinic 1. Rationale? 2. How broadly provided? 3. Are recommendations followed? 4. Barriers to CPS? 5. Strategies that improve implementation? How Improve CPS? 1. Technology, e.g. Computer-assisted selfassessments 2. Provider training 3. Increase use of ancillary staff 4. Forms (e.g. checklists), guidelines, manuals 5. Improved health education materials 6. Improved referral sources 7. Health insurance expansion 8. Enforce guidelines Computer-assisted visits •Based on GAPS •Computer, review print-out with counselor/nurse •Effective? Feasible? Acceptable? What is GAPS? A comprehensive set of recommendations developed to provide a framework for the organization and content of clinical preventive health services 4 Types of Services (GAPS) • • • • Health care (3) Health guidance (7) Screening (13) Immunizations (1) 13 Topics/Health Conditions • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Parents ability to cope Adolescent adjustment Safety & injury prevention Physical fitness Diet Psychosexual development Hypertension High cholesterol Tobacco Alcohol & other drugs Depression & suicide Abuse Learning problems Infectious diseases Comprehensive School-Based Health Centers Brief History • School-based Health Centers established in 1970 • 200 in 1990 • 1,380 in 2000 • all regions of U.S.; all types of schools • only Idaho, Nevada, North & South Dakota, and Wyoming report no SBHC Location of SBHC’s by Region 158 SBHC’s in NYS; 98 in NYC Midwest 15% Southwest & Rocky Mountains 20% Southeast & South Central 18% Mid-Atlantic & New England 37% Pacific 10% Location of SBHC’s by Region Urban 63% Rural 26% Suburban 11% Types of schools housing SBHC’s Middle Schools 16% Elementary Schools 34% High Schools 37% Other Schools 7% K-12 Schools 6% Comprehensive Services • To ensure comprehensive health services, SBHCs led by a community health-care institution • Three-quarters of SBHCs administered by community health center, health department, or hospital Center for Population and Family Health Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University CHEP School-Based Health Centers • • • • • • • I.S. 164 (1986) I.S. 52 (1986) I.S. 143 (1989) I.S. 136 (1990), now TMA/B&R George Washington High School (1995) High School for Pregnant Teens (1998) Family Academy (2002) Staffing •Nurse practitioner or physician assistant •Social worker (MSW) or psychologist •Health educator •Health advocate •MD SBHC Services • Medical • Mental Health • Health Education • Social Work/Support Heilbrunn Center for Population and Family Health Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University In Your Face (Tiezzi) • Group and individual counseling in the SBHC • Classroom education • Intensive case management and case finding • Referrals to YMC and YAC • STD prevention services • HIV pre & post-test counseling and testing Heilbrunn Center for Population and Family Health Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University Evaluation • Pregnancy rates among teens younger than 15 decreased by 34% over four years • In the fourth year of the program, the pregnancy rate in one school that was unable to continue IYF had three times the rate of pregnancy as three program schools (16.5 per 1,000 female students versus 5.8 per 1,000) Heilbrunn Center for Population and Family Health Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University CHEP SBHC Funding 39.4 40 39 35 Percent 30 28.1 28 27 26.2 25 1997-1998 1998-1999 20 15 10 6.2 6 5 0 State City Medicaid Other School Enrollment & Clinic Consents 8000 7712 7000 6428 6000 5000 4000 3158 3270 3000 2000 1000 0 School Enrollment Clinic Consents Consents Male Consents Female Screening Survey: administered school-wide risk screening survey to identify students who might otherwise not utilize health services Results • Fall 1997, over 2,200 7th and 8th graders surveyed: – 3% cigarettes every day – 2% alcohol every day – 13% sex – 2% tried suicide – 15% easy to buy gun – 6% adult in home use substances – 13% > 1 fight in past 3 months – 12% “Hooky Party” in past year – 38% something happen makes them feel terrible when think about it – 16% to a Botanica Depression & Suicide Risk Screening @ George Washington H.S.: the Klingenstein Project Leading Causes of Mortality, Ages 15-19, 2000 Other 19% Motor Vehicle Accidents 38% Malignant Neoplasms 6% Homicide 14% Suicide 12% Other Unintentional Injuries 11% Suicidal Ideation and Non-Lethal Behavior by Gender, High School Students, 2001 25.00% 24.00% 20.00% 15.00% 10.00% 5.00% 18.00% 14.00% 12.00% 11.00% 6.00% 3.00% 2.00% 0.00% Seriously Attempted Plan Considered Suicide Need MD attention Females Males Depression & Suicide •Major depressive disorder •Dysthymic disorder •Bipolar disorder •Reactive depression Major Depressive Disorder •5% of 9-17 year olds •Episodes 7-9 months •Symptoms: •Sad •Lose interest •Critical of self & others •Hopeless •Irritable….aggressive •Trouble concentrating •Lack energy & motivation •Appearance; sleep patterns Dysthymic Disorder •Fewer symptoms •More chronic •Depressed most of day, most days, several years (average 4 years) •Begin to tolerate depressed mood as “normal” •Prevalence 3% Bipolar Disorder •Manic episodes fluctuate with depressive •Usually depressive first; manic maybe not for years •Often begins in adolescence •Manic: energetic, confident, special, trouble sleeping but not tired, talk a lot & rapidly, racing thoughts, disorganized, inflated sense of self, reckless behavior Reactive Depression •AKA “adjustment disorder with depressed mood” •Brief •In response to rejection, loss, disappointment •Most common mood disorder Case Study “Male Adolescent Use of Health Care Services: Where Are the Boys?” Arik Marcell, etal. Jnl of Adolescent Health, 2002: 30 • Secondary analysis of NAMCS, NHAMCS, CAHSS • 13-19 males make fewer visits to adolescent health programs (schools, hospitals, community health centers) • Of all adolescent health clinic venues, SBCs see highest proportion of males (40% vs. 60%) DHHS Office of Family Planning R & D funding from Title X for SBC program for male adolescents in 1999: • one SBC • full-time health educator Engaging male students in health services at the SBC Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University After-school 3-on-3 Basketball “Life Space” Meetings (cafeteria, hallways, etc.) Male Involvement Health Educator Classroom presentations Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University Faculty Meetings After-school Tournament • 18 males • 3 prior visit to SBC • 15 newly recruited • All examined and screened • identified risk taking behaviors • 7 of 15 new males currently in SBC groups Brief classroom presentations to motivate young men to take health action Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University Why do differences between racial/ethnic groups exist? Health Disparities: •Infant mortality •Cancer •Cardiovascular diseas •Diabetes •Immunizations •HIV/AIDS There are many reasons… • Risky behaviors • Unhealthy environments • Not enough health services • Other ideas? Clinic-based Activities • • • • Comprehensive intake assessment Small groups Case management of high risk Referrals Percentage of enrolled male students making individual health ed visit to SBC 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 72% 21% 10% 1998-1999 1999-2000 2001-2002 Condom Distribution Programs in Schools •In >400 U.S. high schools (1997) •22 randomly selected schools in NYC & Chicago •Modest, significant increase on condom use •Does not increase rates of sexual activity •“school may not be the best place to reach adolescents at highest risk of HIV infection”???????